Herman Boone is Keynote Speaker for 2012 Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration

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Former T.C. Williams High School football coach Herman Boone, whose story was told in the movie 鈥淩emember the Titans,鈥 is the keynote speaker for Dartmouth鈥檚 2012 Martin Luther King Jr. celebration. (photo courtesy of APB)

Celebrated football coach Herman Boone, who led a newly-integrated high school football team to the 1971 Virginia state championship and was the subject of the movie Remember the Titans, will be the keynote speaker at Dartmouth鈥檚 on January 16. The events, which run from January 13 through February 3, are capped by the presentation of the College鈥檚 on January 27.

This year鈥檚 theme is 鈥淭he Content of Our Character,鈥 and the 2012 program features a wide range of events. There will be the annual on January 16 with an opening address by Daniel Moses, director of the Seeds of Peace Educators鈥 Programs; two performances of , a play written and performed by Nigerian-born writer and actor Tayo Aluko, at the on January 17 and 18; a on January 19 with four Dartmouth alumni who participated in the Civil Rights movement; and featuring several student groups performing in Collis Common Ground on January 20.

鈥淭his is a particularly special year for our celebration because it marks the 50th anniversary of a titled, 鈥楾owards Freedom,鈥欌 says Gabrielle Lucke, Dartmouth鈥檚 director of diversity training and educational programs and one of the organizers of the 2012 celebration. 鈥淚t is also the 20th anniversary of , hosted by Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, Dr. King鈥檚 brotherhood.鈥

Lucke adds that the organizers are thrilled to have Coach Boone as the keynote speaker. 鈥淭he content of his character was thoroughly tested by the challenges he faced personally and professionally,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e also felt his participation would complement Dartmouth Athletics鈥 Peak Performance initiative, which strives to educate our student-athletes about leadership and citizenship. Hearing Coach Boone talk about character, community, and teamwork will be a wonderful opportunity for students and the entire Dartmouth community.鈥

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Students and community members pay homage to the life and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. at the annual candlelight vigil, 2009 (photo by Joseph Mehling 鈥69)

The is available on Dartmouth鈥檚 Martin Luther King Jr. website.

with Civil Rights Leader Bob Moses, Founder and President of The Algebra Project

Currently a visiting fellow at Princeton鈥檚 Center for African American Studies, Bob Moses in 1961 initiated the Mississippi Voter Registration Project for the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Three years later, with Medgar Evers of the NAACP, David Dennis of the Congress of Racial Equality, and Aaron Henry of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, he revitalized and led the Council of Federated Organizations鈥 Mississippi Summer Project鈥擣reedom Summer鈥攖he historic movement to end racial disenfranchisement in the American South. This celebration of faith, presented by the William Jewett Tucker Foundation, also features performances by the Dartmouth Glee Club, World Percussion Music Ensemble, and Rockapellas a cappella group.

  • Sunday, January 15 from 2鈥3:30 p.m.
  • Rollins Chapel
  • 646-3749

The legendary football coach of T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria, Va., who was portrayed by Denzel Washington in the hit 2000 movie Remember the Titans, will talk about lessons in diversity, building and sustaining winning teams, and the film based on his life. The now-retired coach has acknowledged that filmmakers took several liberties with the Titans鈥 story (for example, the team did not sing and dance as they entered the stadium). But as he recalls in the DVD commentary for the film, one prejudicial incident he faced was toned down for the film. 鈥淭here wasn鈥檛 a brick thrown through my window,鈥 Boone says. 鈥淚t was something far more devastating to any human being than a brick could be. I guess Disney, being the family movie production company that it is, felt that to depict a toilet stool coming through your window was a bit much ... I鈥檝e never gotten over that incident that particular night, because I could never understand how anybody could feel so bad about another human being as to throw a toilet commode through a window.鈥

Prior to Boone鈥檚 talk, President Jim Yong Kim and Joan Leslie 鈥12, president of the Afro-American Society, will give remarks. Free tickets are currently available at the 天美影视kins Center Box Office for all Dartmouth ID holders, and will be made available to the general public at 10 a.m. on Thursday, January 12 (limit four tickets per person). A reception will follow at the Top of the 天美影视.

  • Monday, January 16, at 7 p.m.
  • The Moore Theater
  • 646-3749
Bonnie Barber